It is possible that there was a hostelry on the site in 947 but the exact date of the current building is not known.[3] A hospital of the Knights of St John of Jerusalem was on the site and was partly destroyed during the Wars of the Roses.[3] The hospital was associated with Peterborough Abbey.[3] The main block of the hotel was rebuilt, by William Cecil, 1st Baron Burghley in 1597, but may have incorporated fragments of the earlier building.[3] In 1645 Charles I stayed at the George and other notables and sportsmen. A pit was built for cockfighting.[3]
There are some reports that the hotel is haunted.[6]
Both the main building and the adjacent 68, St Martin's, are Grade II* listed buildings.[1][2]
Architecture
The hotel is a three-storey stone building.[7] The 18th-century front has a cornice and parapet with a cartouche of the arms of the Earl of Exeter.[7][8] The adjacent building which is also called "The Hermitage" at numbers 68 and 69 St Martin's, which has been incorporated into the hotel, is a two-storey building with an attic.[9] The interior includes the remains of a mediaeval hall, probably built in the 14th century, and parts of the structure represent each of the centuries since.[2]
References
^ ab"68 and 69 st Martin's". National Heritage List for England. Historic England. Retrieved 22 March 2020.
^ abc"George Hotel". National Heritage List for England. Historic England. Archived from the original on 8 March 2016. Retrieved 22 March 2020.